Clinical Trials for Mesothelioma Patients—Electronic Tool to Record Cancer Symptoms: Study Outline
Read the study outline for a current clinical trial of an electronic tool being conducted on patients with advanced cancer or malignant mesothelioma. Please note: this information is provided by Weitz & Luxenberg for informational purposes only. This trial is currently only being conducted in Switzerland.
Outline:
This is a controlled, randomized, longitudinal, multicenter study. Physicians are stratified according to participating center. Physicians are randomized to 1 of 2 arms. All patients allocated to a physician undergo the same intervention.
• Arm I: Patients complete a weekly symptom assessment and nutritional intake using a Palm-based monitoring tool. Nurses record weight and Karnofsky performance status (KPS) scores weekly. A proof of electronic transfer sheet is printed and stored
• Arm II: Patients complete a weekly assessment comprising visual analogue scales (VAS) of pain, fatigue, drowsiness, nausea, anxiety, depression, shortness of breath, loss of appetite, and overall well-being; up to 3 optional symptoms selected by the patient; and an estimated nutritional intake using an electronic tool for monitoring symptoms and syndromes associated with advanced cancer (E-MOSAIC). Nurses record the patient's weight, KPS score, body mass index, and assessment of current medication for pain (i.e., morphine-equivalent daily dose), fatigue, and anorexia/cachexia syndromes weekly. A Longitudinal Monitoring Sheet (LoMoS) is printed (comprising VAS of pain, pain medication, fatigue, KPS, medication for fatigue [i.e., methylphenidate hydrochloride or epoetin alfa], anorexia, weight change, nutritional intake, medication, supplements, counseling for anorexia, VAS of individually selected symptoms) and stored.In both arms, patients are assessed for outcome criteria at baseline and at weeks 3 and 6 (end of study).
Courtesy of ClinicalTrials.gov, a service of the U.S. National Institutes of Health
Outcome measures of hand-held electronic tool for mesothelioma victims